Clonogenic survival and cytokinesis-blocked binucleation of skin fibroblasts and normal tissue complications in soft tissue sarcoma patients treated with preoperative radiotherapy

2004 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M Akudugu ◽  
Robert S Bell ◽  
Charles Catton ◽  
Aileen M Davis ◽  
Brian O'Sullivan ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 40 (12) ◽  
pp. 1648-1654 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Levy ◽  
S. Bonvalot ◽  
S. Bellefqih ◽  
L. Vilcot ◽  
F. Rimareix ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Berrin Inanc, MD ◽  
Kubilay Inanc, MD

Purpose: The purpose of the study was to investigate the prognostic factors and survival after preoperative radiotherapy in Extremity Soft Tissue Sarcomas (ESTS). Materials and Methods: In this retrospective study, all patients treated for an extremity sarcoma with pre-operative radiotherapy followed by surgery. Results: The mean follow-up for all 24 ESTS patients was 15.5 (range: 10-39 months). At last follow-up, 9 patients (37%) were alive, 15 patients (62%) had died of distant disease progression. Among the patients died, there were 15 with metastatic relapse (13 lung and 2 cranial metastasis), 5 with both local and metastatic recurrence. The median OS was 16 month. The 2-years actuarial OS rate and 3-years OS rate were 39% and 26%, respectively. The median RFS was 14(12.5-15.4) month. The 2-years and 3-years RFS rate was 71%.The median MFS was 12 months. The 2-years and 3-years MFS rate were 33%, 17%, respectively. The effects of age, sex, histopathologic type, tumor size, tumor localization, tumor grade, tumor depth, radiation doses and recestion margin on OS, RFS, MFS were not observed. In univariate and multivariate model, it was observed that recurrence decreased OS time significantly (p<0.05). Conclusion: Recurrens and metastasis are strong and negative prognostic factor for survival in extremity soft tissue sarcoma patients.


Trials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Seidensaal ◽  
M. Kieser ◽  
A. Hommertgen ◽  
C. Jaekel ◽  
S. B. Harrabi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Following surgery for soft tissue sarcoma of the retroperitoneum, the predominant pattern of failure is local recurrence, which remains the main cause of death. Radiotherapy is utilized to reduce recurrence rates but the efficacy of this strategy has not been definitely established. As treatment tolerability is more favorable with preoperative radiotherapy, normofractionated neoadjuvant treatment is the current approach. The final results of the prospective, randomized STRASS (EORTC 62092) trial, which compared the efficacy of this combined treatment to that of surgery alone, are still awaited; preliminary results presented at the 2019 ASCO Annual Meeting indicated that combined treatment is associated with better local control in patients with liposarcoma (74.5% of the cohort, 11% benefit in abdominal progression free survival after 3 years, p = 0.049). Particles allow better sparing of surrounding tissues at risk, e.g., bowel epithelium, and carbon ions additionally offer biologic advantages and are preferred in slow growing tumors. Furthermore, hypofractionation allows for a significantly shorter treatment interval with a lower risk of progression during radiotherapy. Methods and design We present a prospective, randomized, monocentric phase II trial. Patients with resectable or marginally resectable, histologically confirmed soft tissue sarcoma of the retroperitoneum will be randomized between neoadjuvant proton or neoadjuvant carbon ion radiotherapy in active scanning beam application technique (39 Gy [relative biological effectiveness, RBE] in 13 fractions [5–6 fractions per week] in each arm). The primary objective is the safety and feasibility based on the proportion of grade 3–5 toxicity (CTCAE, version 5.0) in the first 12 months after surgery or discontinuation of treatment for any reason related to the treatment. Local control, local progression-free survival, disease-free survival, overall survival, and quality of life are the secondary endpoints of the study. Discussion The aim of this study is to confirm that hypofractionated, accelerated preoperative radiotherapy is safe and feasible. The rationale for the use of particle therapy is the potential for reduced toxicity. The data will lay the groundwork for a randomized phase III trial comparing hypofractionated proton and carbon ion irradiation with regard to local control. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04219202. Retrospectively registered on January 6, 2020


2019 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 300-306
Author(s):  
Alberto Stefano Tagliafico ◽  
Bianca Bignotti ◽  
Federica Rossi ◽  
Francesca Valdora ◽  
Carlo Martinoli

Abstract Background To perform a radiomics analysis in local recurrence (LR) surveillance of limb soft tissue sarcoma (STS) Patients and methods This is a sub-study of a prospective multicenter study with Institutional Review Board approval supported by ESSR (European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology). radiomics analysis was done on fast spin echo axial T1w, T2w fat saturated and post-contrast T1w (T1wGd) 1.5T MRI images of consecutively recruited patients between March 2016 and September 2018. Results N = 11 adult patients (6 men and 5 women; mean age 57.8 ± 17.8) underwent MRI to exclude STS LR: a total of 33 follow-up events were evaluated. A total of 198 data-sets per patients of both pathological and normal tissue were analyzed. Four radiomics features were significantly correlated to tumor size (p < 0.02) and four radiomics features were correlated with grading (p < 0.05). ROC analysis showed an AUC between 0.71 (95%CI: 0.55–0.87) for T1w and 0.96 (95%CI: 0.87–1.00) for post-contrast T1w. Conclusions radiomics features allow to differentiate normal tissue from pathological tissue in MRI surveillance of local recurrence of STS. radiomics in STS evaluation is useful not only for detection purposes but also for lesion characterization.


2017 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 458-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colleen Dickie ◽  
Amy Parent ◽  
Anthony M. Griffin ◽  
Jay Wunder ◽  
Peter Ferguson ◽  
...  

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